The Nevada State Athletic Commission and the UFC can’t come to an agreement, but UFC boss Dana White makes a pretty compelling argument.

In his latest video blog, White explains why Duane “Bang” Ludwig – and not Todd Duffee or Chan Sung Jung – owns the record for the fastest knockout in UFC history.

Currently, the NSAC doesn’t recognize Ludwig as the record-holder.

Ludwig, who recently has campaigned for recognition as the record-holder, sent opponent Jonathan Goulet to the canvas with a punch in January 2006 at UFC Fight Night 3. Although White uses his video blog to detail how Ludwig’s KO lasted just 6.06 seconds (a second faster than Duffee’s and Jung’s seven-second KOs), NSAC executive director Keith Kizer recently told MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com) he has no way to change it from 11 seconds.

“If you use a stopwatch, from the time the fight starts to the time that Mario grabs Duane, it’s about 7.9 seconds,” he said. “Why the official timekeeper had it at 11, I don’t know.”

Kizer said the commission unfortunately has no legal avenue to overturn the official time.

Earlier this week, White pointed out the perceived irony.

“It’s funny,” he said. “The state athletic commissions are in place to look out for the fighters, but it seems like I’m always the one making sure they don’t get [expletive].”